Wiring boards for array-based electronic devices
In accordance with certain embodiments, lighting systems include one or more lightsheets each including a plurality of strings of light-emitting elements, control elements, and power conductors for supplying power to the light-emitting elements and control elements.
Latest Cooledge Lighting Inc. Patents:
- Wiring boards for array-based electronic devices
- Lighting systems incorporating connections for signal and power transmission
- Lighting systems incorporating connections for signal and power transmission
- High efficiency LEDs and LED lamps
- Sealed and sealable scalable lighting systems incorporating flexible light sheets and related methods
This application is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 13/799,807, filed Mar. 13, 2013, now issued as U.S. Pat. No. 8,947,001, which claims the benefit of and priority to U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 61/697,411, filed Sep. 6, 2012, the entire disclosure of each of which is hereby incorporated herein by reference.
FIELD OF THE INVENTIONIn various embodiments, the present invention generally relates to electronic devices, and more specifically to array-based electronic devices.
BACKGROUNDLight sources such as light-emitting diodes (LEDs) are an attractive alternative to incandescent and fluorescent light bulbs in illumination devices due to their higher efficiency, smaller form factor, longer lifetime, and enhanced mechanical robustness. Broad-area lighting systems such as those designed to replace fluorescent tubes must uniformly distribute the light over the emitting aperture of the lighting system. In some cases, relatively high-power LEDs are utilized in such lighting systems, but use of such LEDs typically requires additional optics or mixing chambers to spread out and/or diffuse the light, which add cost and bulk and reduce efficiency.
LED-based lighting systems based on relatively large arrays of relatively low-power LEDs may be used as an alternative to the use of smaller numbers of high-power LEDs. Such systems may use packaged or unpackaged LEDs. Some systems may be formed using a low cost plastic substrate, while others may utilize more conventional printed circuit or wiring boards, such as FR4 or metal core printed circuit board (MCPCB). These systems may feature conductive traces formed over a low-cost plastic substrate (e.g., a plastic wiring board) interconnecting a large array of packaged or unpackaged LEDs. Such systems have been described in U.S. patent application Ser. No. 13/171,973, the entire disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference.
One potential limitation of such systems is that once the pattern is formed on the circuit board or substrate, the size of the printed area and the pitch and layout of LEDs generally cannot be changed. This is a particular limitation when utilizing high-volume manufacturing, such as roll-to-roll processing, where very large amounts of a single design or layout of a printed sheet must be processed to achieve sufficiently low cost. Thus, supporting a large number of different products having different printed sheet configurations typically requires a large number of printed sheets in inventory and a correspondingly higher manufacturing cost.
A second limitation arises from the electrical topography used in such systems, which typically features large numbers of strings of series-connected LEDs. Because of inherent variations in the forward voltage of the LEDs, as well as potential variations in the resistance of the conductive traces, one generally cannot simply connect all of the strings in parallel and expect that the current will divide equally or substantially equally among the strings. In such a system, one string may have a relatively lower string voltage, and thus a higher current will flow through the string. As more current flows through the string, the LEDs in that string will heat up, causing the LED forward voltage to decrease, resulting in a further increase in current. This results in “current-hogging” in the relatively lower-voltage strings and may result in failure of one or more LEDs in a string, which may cascade into failure of the lighting system.
Conventional LED systems utilize a constant-current driver that provides a constant current to a series-connected string of LEDs, independent of the string voltage. While such an approach works for conventional LED systems, array-based lighting systems may have tens or hundreds of strings of LEDs. Using a separate constant current driver for each string in this situation may be prohibitively expensive. Furthermore, the number of connection points to each sheet in such a scenario is generally roughly equal to the number of strings. Again, this is very costly and potentially is a source of failures that may decrease reliability. Furthermore, providing for such a large number of connections requires a relatively large amount of space or volume, making such systems difficult to install and manage.
A third limitation is related to the fabrication of larger lighting systems by tiling multiple discrete lighting units together. In addition to the cost of assembling such a system, there is often an undesirable lower light intensity, a dark space, or a different color light in the region surrounding the joints between different lighting units. Such an undesirable characteristic at the joint may, for example, be a result of the need to provide additional space between different lighting units to accommodate means for mechanically supporting the lighting units, physically connecting the lighting units, electrically connecting the lighting units, and/or connecting the lighting units to the power source.
In view of the foregoing, a need exists for systems and techniques enabling the low-cost design and manufacture of reliable array-based lighting systems capable of supporting a large number of different products and having a cost-effective drive and interconnect system, as well as the ability to make uniform and reliable large-area lighting systems at low cost.
SUMMARYIn accordance with certain embodiments, lighting systems are fabricated utilizing discrete lightsheets that may be tiled (i.e., joined along facing edges) in one or more directions. Such lightsheets typically include multiple strings of series-connected light-emitting elements (LEEs) and a control element electrically connected to each string. Advantageously, the pitch between strings and/or LEEs may be constant across single lightsheets or even across multiple joined (i.e., tiled) lightsheets, notwithstanding the joints between the lightsheets. Thus, lighting systems in accordance with embodiments of the present invention may have substantially arbitrary sizes but have a consistent appearance (e.g., luminance of emitted light) across their entire areas. The control elements may thus be present on the lightsheets within or between strings of LEEs so as not to interrupt the LEE pitch. Similarly, larger lightsheets may be segmented into smaller lightsheets (e.g., by separation between two strings of LEEs) while still maintaining full functionality of each smaller segment. Power may be supplied to the LEEs via power conductors located on, e.g., one or more edges or sides of the lightsheets, and the resistance of such conductors may be advantageously decreased via connection to larger conductive areas located on the back (i.e., the non-light-emitting side) of the lightsheets.
In an aspect, embodiments of the invention feature a lighting system including or consisting essentially of a substantially planar lightsheet, first and second spaced-apart power conductors each extending in a first direction and disposed on the lightsheet, a plurality of light-emitting strings, and a plurality of control elements. Each light-emitting string (i) includes or consists essentially of a plurality of interconnected light-emitting elements spaced along the light-emitting string, (ii) has a first end electrically coupled to the first power conductor, (iii) has a second end electrically coupled to the second power conductor, and (iv) is oriented in a second direction not parallel to the first direction. The power conductors supply power to each of the light-emitting strings. Each control element is (i) electrically connected to at least one light-emitting string and (ii) configured to utilize power supplied from the power conductors to control power (e.g., supply a substantially constant current) to the light-emitting string(s) to which it is electrically connected. The lightsheet is separable, via a cut (i.e., any physical break or separation, not necessarily made by cutting) spanning the first and second power conductors and not crossing a light-emitting string, into two partial lightsheets each including or consisting essentially of (i) one or more light-emitting strings, (ii) one or more control elements, and (iii) portions of the first and second power conductors configured to supply power to and thereby illuminate the one or more light-emitting strings of the partial lightsheet.
Embodiments of the invention may include one or more of the following in any of a variety of different combinations. A power supply may be electrically connected to the power conductors and configured to provide a substantially constant voltage to the power conductors. A second lightsheet may be coupled to the lightsheet. The second lightsheet may include third and fourth spaced-apart power conductors disposed thereon, and the power supply may be configured to supply a substantially constant voltage to the third and fourth power conductors. Each light-emitting string may include or consist essentially of only 12, 16, 18, or 20 light-emitting elements. The constant voltage provided to the power conductors does not exceed approximately 60 volts. None of the light-emitting strings may extend beyond an area spanned by the first and second power conductors. None of the light-emitting strings may intersect another light-emitting string. The second direction may be substantially perpendicular to the first direction. For each light-emitting string, the light-emitting elements thereof may be spaced apart along the light-emitting string at a substantially constant light-emitting-element pitch. The light-emitting strings may be spaced apart on the lightsheet at a substantially constant string pitch. The string pitch may be an integer multiple of the light-emitting-element pitch, where the integer is greater than 1. The string pitch may be approximately equal to the light-emitting-element pitch. The lightsheet may be separable into the two partial lightsheets via a cut between any two light-emitting strings on the lightsheet. The lightsheet may be separable into more than two partial lightsheets.
Over the lightsheet, light-emitting elements may be spaced apart at a substantially constant light-emitting-element pitch maintained between light-emitting elements of different light-emitting strings. Each control element may be electrically connected to a different light-emitting string. For each light-emitting string, light-emitting elements thereof may be spaced apart at a substantially constant light-emitting-element pitch independent of a position of the control element electrically connected to the light-emitting string. Each light-emitting string may include or consist essentially of only 12, 16, 18, or 20 light-emitting elements. Each light-emitting string may include or consist essentially of only 60, 72, 84, 90, 96, 108, 126, 140, 150, 156, 160, 198, 200, 204, or 211 light-emitting elements. Each light-emitting string may include or consist essentially of only 120, 144, 168, 180, 210, or 216 light-emitting elements. Light-emitting elements of each light-emitting string may be connected in series. At least one control element may be configured to provide a substantially constant current to the at least one light-emitting string to which the control element is connected. At least one light-emitting element may emit substantially white light. At least one light-emitting element may include or consist essentially of a bare-die light-emitting diode or a packaged light-emitting diode. At least one light-emitting string may be a folded string having a straight-line length (i.e., the length of the string if all of the light-emitting elements were connected along a single straight line) longer than a dimension of the lightsheet spanned by the power conductors. The lightsheet may include a substrate on which the plurality of light-emitting strings is disposed. Each light-emitting string may include a plurality of conductive elements, disposed over the substrate, electrically connecting the plurality of light-emitting elements and the control element. A conductive adhesive, an anisotropic conductive adhesive, a wire bond, and/or solder may electrically connect the light-emitting elements to the conductive elements. The lightsheet may be flexible.
In another aspect, embodiments of the invention feature a lighting system including or consisting essentially of a substantially planar lightsheet, disposed on the lightsheet, first and second spaced-apart power conductors each extending in a first direction, a plurality of light-emitting strings, and a plurality of control elements. Each light emitting string (i) comprises a plurality of interconnected light-emitting elements spaced along the light-emitting string, (ii) has a first end electrically coupled to the first power conductor, (iii) has a second end electrically coupled to the second power conductor, and (iv) is oriented in a second direction not parallel to the first direction. The power conductors supply power to each of the light-emitting strings. Each control element is (i) electrically connected to at least one light-emitting string and (ii) configured to utilize power supplied from the power conductors to control the current to the at least one light-emitting string to which it is electrically connected. For each light-emitting string, a pitch at which the light-emitting elements are spaced is independent of a position of the control element electrically connected to the light-emitting string.
Embodiments of the invention may include one or more of the following in any of a variety of different combinations. The lightsheet may be separable, via a cut spanning the first and second power conductors and not crossing a light-emitting string, into two partial lightsheets each including or consisting essentially of (i) one or more light-emitting strings, (ii) one or more control elements, and (iii) portions of the first and second power conductors configured to supply power to and thereby illuminate the one or more light-emitting strings of the partial lightsheet. A power supply configured to provide a substantially constant voltage to the power conductors may be electrically connected to the power conductors. A second lightsheet may be coupled to the lightsheet and include third and fourth spaced-apart power conductors disposed thereon. The power supply may be configured to supply the substantially constant voltage to the third and fourth power conductors. Each light-emitting string may include or consist essentially of only 12, 16, 18, or 20 light-emitting elements. The substantially constant voltage provided to the first and second (and even the third and fourth) power conductors may not exceed approximately 60 volts. The power supply may be configured to adjust a light output of the lightsheet by pulse-width-modulating the substantially constant voltage. None of the light-emitting strings may extend beyond an area spanned by the first and second power conductors. None of the light-emitting strings may intersect another light-emitting string. The second direction may be substantially perpendicular to the first direction. For each light-emitting string, the light-emitting elements thereof may be spaced apart along the light-emitting string at a substantially constant light-emitting-element pitch. The light-emitting strings may be spaced apart on the lightsheet at a substantially constant string pitch. The string pitch may be an integer multiple of the light-emitting-element pitch, where the integer is greater than 1. The string pitch may be approximately equal to the light-emitting-element pitch. Over the lightsheet, light-emitting elements may be spaced apart at a substantially constant light-emitting-element pitch maintained between light-emitting elements of different light-emitting strings. Each control element may be electrically connected to a different light-emitting string. For each light-emitting string, light-emitting elements thereof may be spaced apart at a substantially constant light-emitting-element pitch independent of a position of the control element electrically connected to the light-emitting string.
Each light-emitting string may include or consist essentially of only 12, 16, 18, or 20 light-emitting elements. Each light-emitting string may include or consist essentially of only 60, 72, 84, 90, 96, 108, 126, 140, 150, 156, 160, 198, 200, 204, or 211 light-emitting elements. Each light-emitting string may include or consist essentially of only 120, 144, 168, 180, 210, or 216 light-emitting elements. Light-emitting elements of each light-emitting string may be connected in series. At least one control element may be configured to provide a substantially constant current to the at least one light-emitting string to which the control element is connected. At least one light-emitting element may emit substantially white light. At least one light-emitting element may include or consist essentially of a bare-die light-emitting diode or a packaged light-emitting diode. At least one light-emitting string may be a folded string having a straight-line length longer than a dimension of the lightsheet spanned by the power conductors. The light-emitting elements of the folded string may have a positive terminal and a negative terminal, and all of the positive terminals may be oriented toward a single edge of the lightsheet notwithstanding folds in the folded string. The lightsheet may include a substrate on which the plurality of light-emitting strings is disposed and each light-emitting string may include a plurality of conductive elements, disposed over the substrate, electrically connecting the plurality of light-emitting elements and at least one the control element. A conductive adhesive, an anisotropic conductive adhesive, a wire bond, and/or solder may electrically connect the light-emitting elements to the conductive elements. The substrate may include or consist essentially of polyethylene terephthalate, polyethylene naphthalate, polycarbonate, polyethersulfone, polyester, polyimide, polyethylene, fiberglass, metal core printed circuit board, and/or paper. The conductive elements may include or consist essentially of aluminum, chromium, copper, gold, carbon, silver, carbon ink, and/or silver ink. An insulating layer may be disposed over at least portions of some of the conductive elements. The insulating layer may include or consist essentially of an insulating ink.
The lightsheet may be flexible. At least one control element may include or consist essentially of a plurality of active and/or passive circuit elements. At least one control element may include or consist essentially of (i) one or more resistors and/or (ii) one or more transistors. At least one control element may include or consist essentially of an integrated circuit, e.g., a packaged integrated circuit or a bare-die integrated circuit. Each control element may be electrically connected to only one light-emitting string. The system may include one or more additional lightsheets each having a tiling direction, and the lightsheet and the one or more additional lightsheets may be connected to each other in the tiling direction at interfaces therebetween. A pitch of light-emitting elements may be substantially constant across the lightsheet and the one or more additional lightsheets notwithstanding the interfaces. The lightsheet and the one or more additional lightsheets may be electrically connected in series or in parallel. Each control element may be electrically connected to a different light-emitting string, and a voltage across each of the plurality of light-emitting strings may be at least equal to a sum of a voltage drop across the plurality of light-emitting elements in one string and a voltage drop across the control element electrically connected to the one string. At least one control element may be configured to control an optical characteristic of the light-emitting elements of the at least one string to which it is electrically connected. The optical characteristic may include or consist essentially of chromaticity, color temperature, intensity, color rendering index, spectral power distribution, and/or spatial light distribution pattern. At least one control element may be configured to control the optical characteristic by selectively de-energizing various ones of the light-emitting strings, thereby dimming a light output from the lightsheet, without altering a drive current supplied to the remaining light-emitting strings. At least one first light-emitting string may emit light having a chromaticity, color temperature, intensity, efficiency, color rendering index, or spectral light distribution different from a chromaticity, color temperature, intensity, efficiency, color rendering index, spectral power distribution, or spatial light distribution of at least one second light-emitting string.
The plurality of light-emitting strings may include or consist essentially of (i) a first group of one or more light-emitting strings and (ii) a second group of one or more light-emitting strings different from the first group. The at least one control element may be configured to control the optical characteristic by activating the first group and deactivating the second group to produce light having a first chromaticity, color temperature, intensity, efficiency, color rendering index, spectral power distribution, or spatial light distribution, and activating the second group and deactivating the first group to produce light having a second chromaticity, color temperature, intensity, efficiency, color rendering index, spectral power distribution, or spatial light distribution different from the first chromaticity, color temperature, intensity, efficiency, color rendering index, spectral power distribution, or spatial light distribution. The plurality of light-emitting strings may include or consist essentially of a first group of one or more light-emitting strings and, associated with at least one of the light-emitting elements of the first group, a first optical element of a first type. The plurality of light-emitting strings may include or consist essentially of a second group, different from the first group, of one or more light-emitting strings and, associated with at least one of the light-emitting elements of the second group, a second optical element of a second type different from the first type. The at least one control element may be configured to control the optical characteristic by activating the first group and deactivating the second group to produce light having a first chromaticity, color temperature, intensity, efficiency, color rendering index, spectral power distribution, or spatial light distribution, and activating the second group and deactivating the first group to produce light having a second chromaticity, color temperature, intensity, efficiency, color rendering index, spectral power distribution, or spatial light distribution different from the first chromaticity, color temperature, intensity, efficiency, color rendering index, spectral power distribution, or spatial light distribution.
The plurality of light-emitting strings may include or consist essentially of a first group of one or more light-emitting strings and, associated with at least one of the light-emitting elements of the first group, a first light-conversion material having a first optical characteristic. The plurality of light-emitting strings may include or consist essentially of a second group, different from the first group, of one or more light-emitting strings and, associated with at least one of the light-emitting elements of the second group, a second light-conversion material having a second optical characteristic different from the first optical characteristic. The at least one control element may be configured to control the optical characteristic by activating the first group and deactivating the second group to produce light having a first chromaticity, color temperature, intensity, efficiency, color rendering index, spectral power distribution, or spatial light distribution, and activating the second group and deactivating the first group to produce light having a second chromaticity, color temperature, intensity, efficiency, color rendering index, spectral power distribution, or spatial light distribution different from the first chromaticity, color temperature, intensity, efficiency, color rendering index, spectral power distribution, or spatial light distribution. The plurality of light-emitting strings may include or consist essentially of (i) a first group of one or more light-emitting strings, and (ii) a second group of one or more light-emitting strings different from the first group. The at least one control element may be configured to control the optical characteristic by selectively controlling the first and second groups to produce a first light having a chromaticity, color temperature, intensity, efficiency, color rendering index, spectral power distribution, or spatial light distribution. The at least one control element may be configured to control the optical characteristic by selectively controlling the first and second groups to produce a second light having a chromaticity, color temperature, intensity, efficiency, color rendering index, spectral power distribution, or spatial light distribution, different from the first light. The plurality of light-emitting strings may include or consist essentially of a first group of one or more light-emitting strings and, associated with at least one of the light-emitting elements of the first group, a first optical element of a first type. The plurality of light-emitting strings may include or consist essentially of a second group, different from the first group, of one or more light-emitting strings and, associated with at least one of the light-emitting elements of the second group, a second optical element of a second type different from the first type. The at least one control element may be configured to control the optical characteristic by selectively controlling the first and second groups to produce a first light having a first chromaticity, color temperature, intensity, efficiency, color rendering index, spectral power distribution, or spatial light distribution. The at least one control element may be configured to control the optical characteristic by selectively controlling the first and second groups to produce a second light having a chromaticity, color temperature, intensity, efficiency, color rendering index, spectral light distribution, or spatial light distribution, different from the first light.
The plurality of light-emitting strings may include or consist essentially of a first group of one or more light-emitting strings and, associated with at least one of the light-emitting elements of the first group, a first light-conversion material having a first optical characteristic. The plurality of light-emitting strings may include or consist essentially of a second group, different from the first group, of one or more light-emitting strings and, associated with at least one of the light-emitting elements of the second group, a second light-conversion material having a second optical characteristic different from the first optical characteristic. The at least one control element may be configured to control the optical characteristic by selectively controlling the first and second groups to produce a first light having a first chromaticity, color temperature, intensity, efficiency, color rendering index, spectral power distribution, or spatial light distribution. The at least one control element may be configured to control the optical characteristic by selectively controlling the first and second groups to produce a second light having a chromaticity, color temperature, intensity, efficiency, color rendering index, spectral power distribution, or spatial light distribution, different from the first light.
An array of optical elements may each be associated with at least one light-emitting element, and the array of optical elements may focus and/or shape light from the light-emitting elements to a desired illumination pattern. At least one optical element may be optically coupled to the at least one light-emitting element with no interface to air therebetween. Within one of the light-emitting strings, at least a first light-emitting element may be associated with an optical element of a first type, and at least a second light-emitting element may be associated with an optical element of a second type different from the first type. At least one light-emitting element within a first light-emitting string may be associated with an optical element of a first type, and at least one light-emitting element within a second light-emitting string, different from the first light-emitting string, may be associated with an optical element of a second type different from the first type. At least one light-emitting element may include or consist essentially of an LED and a light-conversion material disposed thereon. A conductive layer electrically connected to the first and second power conductors may be disposed on a back side of the lightsheet opposite a front side of the lightsheet on which the strings are disposed. The conductive layer disposed on the back side of a lightsheet may be electrically connected to the first and second power conductors by one or more vias (i.e., that extend through a thickness of the lightsheet). An insulating layer may be disposed over at least a portion of the conductive layer disposed on the back side of the lightsheet. The lightsheet may include at least 200 light-emitting elements. At least one light-emitting element may include or consist essentially of one or more semiconductor materials. The one or more semiconductor materials may include or consist essentially of silicon, InAs, AlAs, GaAs, InP, AlP, GaP, InSb, GaSb, AlSb, GaN, AlN, InN, and/or mixtures or alloys thereof. The at least one light-emitting element may be a III-nitride-based LED. At least one light-emitting element may be associated with a light-conversion material. All or a portion of the lightsheet may be reflective to a range of wavelengths of light emitted by the at least one light-emitting element and/or a range of wavelengths of light emitted by the light-conversion material. The at least one light-emitting element may include or consist essentially of a light-emitting diode. The light-conversion material may include or consist essentially of at least one phosphor. The light-conversion material may include or consist essentially of a binder and a phosphor. The binder may have an index of refraction between about 1.3 and about 1.7.
At least a first light-emitting element may be associated with a first light-conversion material and (ii) at least a second light-emitting element, different from the first light-emitting element, may be associated with a second light-conversion material different from the first light-conversion material. Within one of the light-emitting strings, (i) at least a first light-emitting element may be associated with a first light-conversion material and (ii) at least a second light-emitting element, different from the first light-emitting element, may be associated with a second light-conversion material different from the first light-conversion material. At least one light-emitting element within a first light-emitting string may be associated with a first light-conversion material, and at least one light-emitting element within a second light-emitting string, different from the first light-emitting string, may be associated with a second light-conversion material different from the first light-conversion material. One of the plurality of light-emitting strings may emit radiation with a first chromaticity and another one of the plurality of light-emitting strings may emit radiation with a second chromaticity different from the first chromaticity. Within one of the light-emitting strings, one of the light-emitting elements may emit radiation with a first chromaticity and another one of the light-emitting elements may emit radiation with a second chromaticity different from the first chromaticity. The lightsheet may have a length of at least 0.1 meter, at least 0.5 meters, or at least 3 meters. The lightsheet may include at least 200, or at least 500, light-emitting elements. The lightsheet may include at least 10, or at least 50, light-emitting strings.
The system may include a power connector for connecting a lightsheet to another lightsheet or to a source of electrical power. The power connector may include or consist essentially of at least one crimp connector. Each light-emitting element may include a substrate that is substantially transparent to a range of wavelengths of light emitted by the light-emitting element. The light-emitting elements of at least one first light-emitting string may be substantially identical to the light-emitting elements of at least one second light-emitting string different from the at least one first light-emitting string. At least one light-emitting string may emit substantially white light and at least one light-emitting string emits red light. A carrier may at least partially support the lightsheet and include or consist essentially of glass, polymer, and/or metal.
At least one control element, or even all of the control elements, may be configured to transmit or receive a control signal. All of the control elements may be configured to transmit or receive the same control signal. At least one of the control elements, or even each of the control elements, may be configured to individually transmit or receive a control signal. At least one control conductor may be configured provide a control signal to at least one control element. At least one control element may be configured to accept a control signal comprising at least one of radio waves, microwaves, sound waves, infrared light, visible light and ultraviolet light, or ultrasound. At least one control element may be configured to accept a control signal including or consisting essentially of an electromagnetic carrier. At least one power conductor may be configured to provide a control signal to at least one control element.
In a further aspect, embodiments of the invention feature a lighting system that includes or consists essentially of a substantially planar lightsheet, disposed on the lightsheet, first and second spaced-apart power conductors each extending in a first direction, a plurality of light-emitting strings, and a plurality of control elements. Each light-emitting string (i) includes a plurality of interconnected light-emitting diodes (LEDs) spaced along the light-emitting string, (ii) has a first end electrically coupled to the first power conductor, (iii) has a second end electrically coupled to the second power conductor, and (iv) is oriented in a second direction not parallel to the first direction. The power conductors supply power to each of the light-emitting strings and at least one light-emitting string emits white light. Each control element (i) is electrically connected to at least one light-emitting string, (ii) is configured to utilize power supplied from the power conductors to supply a substantially constant current to the at least one light-emitting string to which it is electrically connected, and (iii) includes or consists essentially of one or more resistors and one or more transistors. The lightsheet is separable, via a cut spanning the first and second power conductors and not crossing a light-emitting string, into two partial lightsheets each including or consisting essentially of (i) one or more light-emitting strings, (ii) one or more control elements, and (iii) portions of the first and second power conductors configured to supply power to and thereby illuminate the one or more light-emitting strings of the partial lightsheet. For each light-emitting string, a pitch at which the LEDs are spaced is (i) substantially constant and (ii) independent of a position of the control element electrically connected to the light-emitting string.
Embodiments of the invention may include one or more of the following in any of a variety of different combinations. At least one of the LEDs may be a packaged LED. The lightsheet may include a substrate on which the plurality of light-emitting strings is disposed. Each light-emitting string may include a plurality of conductive elements, disposed over the substrate, electrically connecting the plurality of light-emitting elements. An insulating layer may be disposed over at least portions of some of the conductive elements. At least one control element may include or consist essentially of an integrated circuit. At least one control element may be configured to control an optical characteristic of the LEDs of the at least one string to which it is electrically connected. The optical characteristic may include or consist essentially of chromaticity, color temperature, intensity, color rendering index, spectral power distribution, and/or spatial light distribution pattern. At least one light-emitting string may be a folded string having a straight-line length longer than a dimension of the lightsheet spanned by the power conductors. The system may include one or more additional lightsheets each having a tiling direction, and the lightsheet and the one or more additional lightsheets may be connected to each other in the tiling direction at interfaces therebetween. One of the plurality of light-emitting strings may emit radiation with a first chromaticity and another one of the plurality of light-emitting strings may emit radiation with a second chromaticity different from the first chromaticity.
These and other objects, along with advantages and features of the invention, will become more apparent through reference to the following description, the accompanying drawings, and the claims. Furthermore, it is to be understood that the features of the various embodiments described herein are not mutually exclusive and can exist in various combinations and permutations. Reference throughout this specification to “one example,” “an example,” “one embodiment,” or “an embodiment” means that a particular feature, structure, or characteristic described in connection with the example is included in at least one example of the present technology. Thus, the occurrences of the phrases “in one example,” “in an example,” “one embodiment,” or “an embodiment” in various places throughout this specification are not necessarily all referring to the same example. Furthermore, the particular features, structures, routines, steps, or characteristics may be combined in any suitable manner in one or more examples of the technology. As used herein, the term “substantially” means ±10%, and in some embodiments, ±5%. The term “consists essentially of” means excluding other materials that contribute to function, unless otherwise defined herein. Nonetheless, such other materials may be present, collectively or individually, in trace amounts.
Herein, two components such as light-emitting elements and/or optical elements being “aligned” or “associated” with each other may refer to such components being mechanically and/or optically aligned. By “mechanically aligned” is meant coaxial or situated along a parallel axis. By “optically aligned” is meant that at least some light (or other electromagnetic signal) emitted by or passing through one component passes through and/or is emitted by the other.
In the drawings, like reference characters generally refer to the same parts throughout the different views. Also, the drawings are not necessarily to scale, emphasis instead generally being placed upon illustrating the principles of the invention. In the following description, various embodiments of the present invention are described with reference to the following drawings, in which:
Referring to
As shown, LEEs 130 are positioned across substrate 165 in a regular periodic array, although this is not a limitation of the present invention and in other embodiments LEEs 130 may occupy any positions on lightsheet 100. Power conductors 110 and 120 provide power to each LEE string, for example the string 150 encircled by the dashed line in
In an exemplary embodiment, CE 140 is configured to maintain a constant or substantially constant current through LEEs 130 of string 150. For example, in some embodiments, the constant voltage applied to power conductors 110, 120 may vary, or the sum of the forward voltages of LEEs 130 in different strings may be somewhat different, for example as a result of manufacturing tolerances, or the component and/or operational values of the element(s) within CE 140 may vary, for example as a result of manufacturing tolerances or changes in operating temperature, and CE 140 acts to maintain the current through LEEs 130 substantially constant in the face of these variations. In other words, the input to the lightsheet is a constant voltage that is applied to power conductors 110, 120, and CEs 140 convert the constant voltage to a constant or substantially constant current through LEEs 130. As will be described herein, the design of CE 140 may be varied to provide different levels of control or variation of the current through LEEs 130. In some embodiments, CEs 140 may control the current through LEEs 130 to be substantially constant with a variation of less than about ±25%. In some embodiments, CEs 140 may control the current through LEEs 130 to be substantially constant with a variation of less than about ±15%. In some embodiments, CEs 140 may control the current through LEEs 130 to be substantially constant with a variation of less than about ±10%. In some embodiments, CEs 140 may control the current through LEEs 130 to be substantially constant with a variation of less than about ±5%.
In some embodiments, as detailed herein, CEs 140 may, in response to a control signal, act to maintain a constant or substantially constant current through LEEs 130 until instructed to change to a different constant or substantially constant current, for example by an external control signal. In some embodiments, as detailed herein, all CEs 140 on a sheet may act in concert, that is maintain or change the current through all associated LEEs 130; however, this is not a limitation of the present invention, and in other embodiments one or more CEs 140 may be individually instructed and/or energized.
Lightsheets may be produced as individual components or in a roll-to-roll format. Lightsheets of different lengths, where for convenience the length is identified by the double-headed arrow 305 in
In embodiments where the lightsheet includes or consists essentially of folded strings, the distance between adjacent strings (i.e., the “string pitch”) may be different from the LEE pitch (i.e., the distance between adjacent LEEs on a string). For reference, in
Cutting or segmenting lightsheet web 360 into smaller lightsheets may be carried out by a wide variety of techniques, for example knife cutting, laser cutting, or the like. The method of segmentation is not a limitation of the present invention. In one embodiment, segmentation occurs at the midpoint or substantially at the midpoint between adjacent strings, as discussed in more detail below.
Lightsheet segmentation may occur at any point in the manufacturing process, for example after formation of the substrate 165, after formation of LEEs 130 and/or CEs 140 over substrate 165 (
In addition, individual lightsheets 360 may be tiled with little or no substantial change in pitch or variation in optical characteristics across the joint. In some embodiments tiling may be enabled in one direction, i.e., length or width, for example the length identified by arrow 305 in
In one embodiment, tiling is achieved by segmenting one or more lightsheets or lightsheet webs between adjacent strings 150. In some embodiments, lightsheets or lightsheet webs are segmented at the midpoint or substantially at the midpoint between adjacent strings 150, such that the distance between the last string and the edge of sheet 360 is one-half of the string pitch, as shown in
In some embodiments of the present invention, the pitch is determined at least in part by the desired wiring board width, the string voltage, the LEE voltage at the desired operating current (e.g., the forward voltage of an LED), and the LEE pitch (i.e., the spacing between individual LEEs). The string voltage may be determined by various constraints, for example the desired or available power for powering the system, certification issues or the like. In one embodiment, the design process starts with the forward voltage of the LEE Vf, the specified string voltage Vs, and LEE pitch p. The number of LEEs in a string is given approximately by n=Vs/Vf. The physical string length is then given approximately by the product of the pitch and the number of LEEs, i.e., (n−1)×p. In some embodiments of this approach, n may not be an integer and adjustments to n or p may be employed to make n an integer. In another embodiment, adjustments to Vf, for example by changing the operating current or temperature, or to Vs, by changing the design requirement, may also be employed, for example to make n an integer.
In some embodiments, the physical string length, i.e., the length of the string if it were laid out in a straight line, is larger than the desired wiring board width and in this case the string may be folded or twisted to fit within the desired wiring board width, for example as shown in
While
Another aspect of embodiments of the present invention may be realized in reference to
In a first exemplary embodiment, Vs=60 V, Vf=3.0 V and p=1 cm. This results in 20 LEDs per string and a “straight” string length of about 19 cm between the first and last LEDs.
In the first exemplary embodiment above, Vs=60 V, Vf=3.0 V and p=1 cm. This results in 20 LEDs per string and a “straight” string length of about 19 cm between the first and last LED.
As detailed herein, the wiring boards shown in
The examples shown in
The number of configurations may be determined by taking the quantity of factors of for a particular number and subtracting one, to eliminate the single-LEE string. Table 2 shows the number of folded string configurations for strings including or consisting of LEEs from 30 to 220. Table 2 may be used to determine the number of different folded string configurations for different numbers of LEEs per string.
In some embodiments, it may be desirable to limit the voltage supplied to the lightsheet and/or to limit the power supplied to one or more electrically coupled lightsheets. For example, in the United States, a class 2 UL electrical certification requires that the voltage not exceed 60V and the power not exceed 100 watts. For such class 2 configurations, strings including or consisting essentially of 12, 16, 18, or 20 LEEs 130 may be advantageously chosen to permit a relatively large number of lightsheet width configurations.
For higher voltage strings, Table 2 may be used to advantageously select the number of LEEs per string to achieve any number of folded string configurations. As may be seen from Table 2, strings including or consisting essentially of 60, 72, 84, 90, 96, 108, 126, 140, 150, 156, 160, 198, 200, 204, and 211 LEEs have 11 folded string configurations. As may be seen from Table 2, strings including or consisting essentially of 144 LEEs have 14 folded string configurations. As may be seen from Table 2, strings including or consisting essentially of 120, 168, 210, and 216 LEEs have 15 folded string configurations. As may be seen from Table 2, strings including or consisting essentially of 180 LEEs have 17 folded string configurations.
If the desired width of the wiring board or lightsheet is larger than the straight-line string voltage, several approaches may be used. In one embodiment, wiring boards with a smaller width may be tiled together in the width direction; however, with the structures discussed above, the LEEs on adjacent sides of the joint in the width direction may not have the same pitch as the LEEs on the wiring board due to the presence of power conductors 110 and 120. Another approach is to modify some of the parameters to achieve a longer straight-line string length, per the flow chart in
In step 715 the total string voltage is determined. In some embodiments a string may include one or more CEs 140, which may have their own voltage requirements (i.e., to account for a voltage drop across CEs 140). If present, this voltage drop may be taken into account when determining the total string voltage, which also includes the voltage across the LEEs 130 in each string. In some embodiments it may also be necessary to include the voltage drop across the conductive elements (traces) in each string and/or in the power conductors.
In some embodiments, power conductors 110 and 120 provide a fixed or substantially fixed voltage to each string, and that voltage may be larger than the string voltage discussed above, for example to accommodate voltage taken up by CEs 140. For example, if the string voltage discussed above is the voltage across only the LEEs in each string; then the voltage across power conductors 110 and 120, for example in
In some embodiments, it may be desirable to increase the conductivity of power conductors 110, 120 and or conductive elements 160. For example, power conductors 110, 120 formed on substrate 165 may have an undesirably large resistance, resulting in an undesirably large voltage drop across power conductors 110, 120 in operation causing a reduction in efficiency or luminous efficacy or even the inability to turn on one or more strings, if the voltage is reduced sufficiently. In some embodiments, this may be accommodated by modifying the voltage required to power each string. In some embodiments, the voltage level on power conductors 110, 120 may change along the lengths of the power conductors. For example, the voltage level may decrease in a direction away from the point of connection to the power source because, e.g., of the resistance in the power conductors. In some embodiments, the voltage to energize each string may then be designed to follow the available voltage along the power conductor, for example by changing the voltage drop across CE 140, conductive elements 160 and/or reducing the number of LEEs 130 in the string.
In some embodiments, power conductors 110, 120 may be formed using a higher conductivity material than that used for conductive traces 160. In some embodiments, power conductors 110, 120 may be formed of the same material as that used for conductive traces 160, but may have a relatively larger thickness or relatively larger width or cross-sectional area than that used for conductive traces 160, thus decreasing their resistance. In some embodiments, power conductors 110, 120 may have multiple layers of the same or different materials.
In some embodiments, an additional conductive path may be formed in parallel with all or parts of power conductors 110, 120 in order to reduce the total resistance. This may be advantageous in embodiments where multiple lightsheets 360 are connected together and powered by a single power supply or where lightsheet 360 is relatively long, for example at least about 1 meter, or at least 5 meters, or at least 10 meters long. In some embodiments the conductivity of power conductors 110, 120 and/or conductive elements 160 may not be sufficiently high to achieve a desired value of voltage drop in the conductors. Such a situation may lead to undesirably high resistance losses, leading to a loss in luminous efficacy of the lighting system and/or undesirable heating of the conductors. In some embodiments, a conductive material may be formed over and in electrical contact with all or portions of power conductors 110, 120. For example, a conductive tape 810, optionally including a conductive adhesive, may be formed over or adhered to power conductors 110, 120 to decrease their resistance, as shown in
Various embodiments of the invention may include a carrier for one or more lightsheets. For example, as discussed above, the lightsheet may be installed in a frame, fixture or enclosure, which may also be identified as a carrier. The carrier may be rigid or flexible and may provide support for the lightsheet(s), an enclosure for the lightsheet(s), support for additional equipment such as a power supply, driver, control or sense electronics, or the like.
In some embodiments, the lightsheet may include one or more conductive elements on the back of the substrate, for example on the back of substrate 165 illustrated in
In some embodiments, the back and/or front metal may act as a reflector for light generated by LEEs 130, for example to direct it more in the forward direction, away from sheet 165. In some embodiments, conductive elements 160, back power conductors 910, 920 and/or power conductors 110, 120 may be reflective to a wavelength of light emitted by LEE 130. In some embodiments, conductive elements 160, back power conductors 910, 920 and/or power conductors 110, 120 may have a reflectivity greater than 70% to a wavelength of light emitted by LEEs 130. In some embodiments, the conductive elements near or below LEEs 130 may be configured such that there is no direct pathway for light from the front to the back of the lightsheet. One example of such a configuration is shown for electrical device 1100 in
In some embodiments of the present invention, the lightsheet may include parallel groups of strings, as schematically illustrated in
In some embodiments, control of the resistance may be by other means than controlling the width of the conductive traces, i.e., by controlling dimensions of conductive elements 160, power conductors 110, 120, and/or back power conductors 910, 920. In some embodiments, resistance control may be achieved by using different thickness conductive traces. In some embodiments, resistance control may be achieved by using different materials for different conductive traces or different portions of conductive traces, for example with different conductivities. In some embodiments, resistance control may be achieved by using a plurality of layers of conductive and/or non-conductive materials that form all or portions of the conductive traces.
As shown in
As discussed above, the back power conductors that carry less current are relatively narrower than the back power conductors that carry more current. In the example shown in
In some embodiments, the region between adjacent back power conductors is shifted so that it does not coincide with the position of LEEs 130 on the front of electronic device 1500. In some embodiments, this configuration may provide relatively higher reflectivity from the back power conductors to a wavelength of light emitted by LEEs 130.
As shown in
Utilization of the same electrical constraints as in the first exemplary embodiment detailed above, that is Vs=60 V, Vf=3.0 V, and p=1 cm, results in a 20-LEE string having a “straight” string length of about 19 cm. Thus, each string segment has a width of about 19 cm and the distance between adjacent strings is about 1 cm. In this example, the lightsheet has three adjacent string segments—it thus looks similar to electrical device 1500 shown in
In some embodiments, back power conductor 920 may include or consist essentially of a different material or set of materials with a lower sheet resistance, or may include or consist essentially of a thicker layer of the same material as power conductor 120. This may result in a further reduction in power conductor power loss. For example, back power conductor 920 may have a thickness of at least about 10 μm or at least about 25 μm or at least about 50 μm or even larger than about 100 μm. In the case where back power conductor 920 has a thickness of about 25 μm, then the voltage drop per cm in the above example would be reduced by a factor of about 10 to about 0.00009 V per cm. In this case, a lightsheet may be made 10 m long with a total voltage drop across back power conductor 920 of only about 0.009 V. It should be noted that the power losses in the power conductors at the edge of the lightsheet are about the same as the losses in the ones in the center, because the edge power conductors have about half the width and thus about twice the resistance, but are carrying about one-half of the current. Thus in this embodiment, the resistive losses are substantially equalized for both size power conductors.
This embodiment of the present invention therefore provides the ability to make lightsheets with three key attributes: (i) very large dimensions, (ii) a single power connection to one end of the lightsheet, and (iii) relatively very low resistive power losses for relatively large lightsheet sizes. The width may be increased by adding additional adjacent segments of strings while the length may be increased by adding more strings between the power conductors. The pitch between LEEs 130 in a string is the same or substantially the same as between adjacent LEEs 130 in adjacent strings and in adjacent string segments—that is, in both the length and width direction of the lightsheet, resulting in the production of substantially uniform illumination from the sheet as a function of area.
The discussion above provides one example of an embodiment of the present invention. The dimensions of and materials used for the power conductors may be modified as discussed above to achieve acceptable power losses and operation for a variety of lightsheet designs and sizes. For example, smaller lightsheet sizes may permit the use of thinner power conductors or less costly materials making up the power conductors, or may permit the elimination of the back power conductors.
Another embodiment of the present invention is a lightsheet or lightsheet web that may be manufactured in large area and then cut to size. As discussed previously, cutting or segmentation of a lightsheet or lightsheet web may occur at various points in the manufacturing process. In some embodiments, lightsheets or lightsheet webs may be inventoried or stored in complete or partially completed form. In some embodiments, lightsheets or lightsheet webs may be segmented in the field. In some embodiments, segmentation may occur after installation, for example to change the size of the lightsheet or to remove and replace a damaged or nonfunctional lightsheet or portion of a lightsheet.
Electrical device 1500 shown in
As shown in
The schematic of electrical device 1600 may represent a stand-alone lightsheet, a portion of a stand-alone lightsheet, or all or a portion of a lightsheet web. As shown in
This structure provides a useful advantage. Instead of having to design and manufacture lightsheets of many different shapes and sizes, a lightsheet web may be manufactured in very large volumes and then cut to the required sizes. Such cutting may be done during manufacture, after manufacture or in the field. In some embodiments, lightsheet web may be shipped to storage or distribution sites and cut to order. In some embodiments, lightsheet web may be shipped to a job site and cut to order. The minimum lightsheet size is determined by unit cell 1660 size, as described above. The unit cell may be made relatively small, permitting relatively fine control of the final lightsheet size and shape. Using the values from the above example, the unit cell is about 3 cm by about 6 cm, i.e., the minimum length increment is about 3 cm and the minimum width increment is about 6 cm. In other embodiments, the number of LEEs 130 per string 150 and the configuration of string 150, for example a straight string, or how the string is folded, permit variation of the size of unit cell 1660 and thus of the minimum length and width increments.
Just as electrical device 1600 may be cut or separated into unit cell segments, multiple segments or lightsheets may be tiled together in the length or width or both length and width directions without any change in pitch across the joint between adjacent segments or lightsheets. This permits fabrication, both at the manufacture site, and in the field, of relatively large illuminated areas comprising multiple lightsheets, with no change in LEE 130 pitch or optical characteristics across the joint.
In some embodiments of the present invention, all or portions of the front and/or back of the lightsheet may be covered by a cover layer or material. In some embodiments, the cover layer may include or consist essentially of an insulating layer, for example to prevent electrical contact with conductive elements 160, power conductors 110, 120 and/or back power conductors 910, 920. In some embodiments, the insulating material may include or consist essentially of, e.g., one or more layers formed over the back or front. Such layers may include or consist essentially of a material the same as or similar to that of substrate 165, e.g., PET, PEN, polyimide, polyester, acrylic or the like. In some embodiments, the insulating material may include or consist essentially of, for example, silicone, silicon oxide, silicon dioxide, silicon nitride or the like. In some embodiments, the insulating material may comprise an ink, where the ink may have one or a plurality of colors or markings. In some embodiments the insulating material comprises a white ink. In some embodiments, the insulating material may be a separate layer adhered to the lightsheet, for example using glue or adhesive or tape. In some embodiments, the insulating material may be formed over the lightsheet by, for example, spray coating, dip coating, printing, sputtering, evaporation, chemical vapor deposition or the like. In some embodiments, the insulating layer may be patterned and a portion of the insulating layer removed to permit access to a portion of the underlying lightsheet. In some embodiments, the insulating layer may be patterned such that it does not cover LEEs 130. In some embodiments, patterning may be achieved by selective deposition, for example, selective spray coating, or by patterning and etching or removal of portions of the insulating layer. In some embodiments, the cover layer may have additional properties, for example, to provide flame resistance or to provide a reflective or light-absorbing surface. In some embodiments, a front cover material is reflective to a wavelength of light emitted by LEEs 130. In some embodiments, the front cover material is white. In some embodiments, the back cover layer is black.
One or more lightsheets may be powered from a power supply, for example a constant-voltage or constant-current power supply. In some embodiments, the input power for the power supply may be line voltage, for example 120 AC, 240 VAC, 277 VAC with a frequency of, for example, 50 Hz or 60 Hz. In some embodiments, the power supply may include or consist essentially of a universal power supply capable of accommodating a relatively wide range of input voltages and frequencies. In some embodiments, the input power for the power supply may be a DC voltage. The input power for the power supply is not a limitation of the present invention and in other embodiments any input power may be used.
In some embodiments, the light intensity or light output power of the lighting system, for example as shown in
In some embodiments, LEEs 130 of one or more lightsheets are of the same type. In some embodiments, LEEs 130 of one or more lightsheets may be different. In some embodiments, the lightsheet may include multiple different types of LEEs 130. For example, different types of LEEs 130 may include different size LEEs 130 or LEEs 130 that have different electrical or optical characteristics, such as emission wavelength, forward voltage, and/or spectral power distribution. In some embodiments, a string 150 may include multiple LEEs 130 of the same type; however, this is not a limitation of the present invention and in other embodiments the string 150 may include more than one type of LEE, for example LEEs that emit light at different wavelengths or with different spectral power distributions or have different sizes. In some embodiments, the lightsheet may include multiple strings 150, where each string 150 includes or consists essentially of multiple LEEs 130 of the same type; however, this is not a limitation of the present invention and in other embodiments the lightsheet many include multiple strings 150 where each string 150 may include or consist essentially of more than one type of LEE, for example LEEs that emit light at different wavelengths or with different spectral power distributions or have different sizes. The number of different types of LEEs 130 or lightsheets of a lighting system is not a limitation of the present invention. The number of different types of lightsheets of the lighting system is not a limitation of the present invention. In some embodiments, the lighting system may include a combination of bare-die LEEs 130 and packaged LEDs 130.
In some embodiments, a lightsheet, lightsheet web or lightsheet-based illumination system may also include one or more control elements that permit control of LEEs 130 within a string 150, individual strings 150 and/or one or more groups of strings 150. Such control may be implemented within one lightsheet or group of lightsheets, for example, lightsheets that are tiled together. These control elements may be used for a variety of purposes. For example, in some embodiments, strings may be individually or group-wise addressed and controlled to provide a range of light levels, for example to implement dimming functionality. In one embodiment, this may be implemented by turning one or more strings off to reduce the overall light output level. In one embodiment this may be implemented by changing the drive current level to LEEs 130 within one or more strings 150. In one embodiment this may be implemented by pulse-width-modulating the power, e.g., the current or voltage, to LEEs 130 within one or more strings 150.
In some embodiments, different strings 150 may include one or more different types of LEEs 130, for example, having different color temperatures or light distribution patterns. In this way one or more optical characteristics of the lightsheet or illumination system may be changed by selective activation and deactivation of one or groups of strings 150, or by changing the drive current to one or more groups of strings 150.
In some embodiments, control input 2210 may be applied to power supply 2030 as shown in
As described above, lightsheet 360 may have conductive traces on the front, back or both sides. In some embodiments, it may be desirable to have separate conductive traces cross each other without electrical coupling between the two conductive traces but not have conductive traces on both sides of lightsheet 360. In this case cross-over elements may be employed as shown in
While the discussion above related to control signals has used control lines on the lightsheet to deliver the control signals to the control elements, this is not a limitation of the present invention and in other embodiments control signals may be delivered to control elements by any means, for example using light-based communication, radio-based communication, Wi-Fi, or communication using radiation in other parts of the electromagnetic spectrum.
While the discussion above has focused on one-way control, that is the use of control signals to effect changes on the lightsheet, this is not a limitation of the present invention and in other embodiments communication may be bidirectional. For example, in some embodiments LEEs, 130, strings 150, or the lightsheet may communicate information back to a control system. Examples of such information may include lightsheet or LEE 130 temperature, light output value, operation time, lumen degradation, color temperature, or the like.
Control input 2210 may be provided in a variety of ways. In one embodiment, control input 2210 may be provided from a switch or knob that is actuated manually. In one embodiment, control input 2210 may originate from another system, for example, one that is used to control lighting within the space. In one embodiment, control input 2210 may originate in a building management system, for example, one that controls heating or lighting or emergency operations or the like. In one embodiment, control input 2210 may originate in a portable or wireless device, for example a mobile phone, computer, tablet, or the like. In one embodiment, control input 2210 may originate from a sensor system, for example, one that senses ambient light, occupancy, heat, humidity, smoke or the like. In one embodiment, sensors that act to provide control input 2210 may be positioned on the lightsheet or within the luminaire containing the lightsheet or they may be positioned elsewhere.
While the discussion above related to control signals has used control lines on the lightsheet to deliver the control signals to the control elements to control aspects of the lightsheet, this is not a limitation of the present invention and in other embodiments control signals may be provided for other purposes, for example, to act as a receiving and transmitting center for wireless signals for tablets, computers, telephones, mobile phones and other such electronic devices. Such communication signals may take place over any portion of the electromagnetic spectrum, for example IR, visible light, UV, radio waves, etc.
As utilized herein, the term “light-emitting element” (LEE) refers to any device that emits electromagnetic radiation within a wavelength regime of interest, for example, visible, infrared or ultraviolet regime, when activated, by applying a potential difference across the device or passing a current through the device. Examples of light-emitting elements include solid-state, organic, polymer, phosphor-coated or high-flux LEDs, laser diodes or other similar devices as would be readily understood. The emitted radiation of an LEE may be visible, such as red, blue or green, or invisible, such as infrared or ultraviolet. An LEE may produce radiation of a continuous or discontinuous spread of wavelengths. An LEE may feature a phosphorescent or fluorescent material, also known as a light-conversion material, for converting a portion of its emissions from one set of wavelengths to another. In some embodiments, the light from an LEE includes or consists essentially of a combination of light directly emitted by the LEE and light emitted by an adjacent or surrounding light-conversion material. An LEE may include multiple LEEs, each emitting essentially the same or different wavelengths. In some embodiments, a LEE is an LED that may feature a reflector over all or a portion of its surface upon which electrical contacts are positioned. The reflector may also be formed over all or a portion of the contacts themselves. In some embodiments, the contacts are themselves reflective. Herein “reflective” is defined as having a reflectivity greater than 65% for a wavelength of light emitted by the LEE on which the contacts are disposed. In some embodiments, an LEE may include or consist essentially of an electronic device or circuit or a passive device or circuit. In some embodiments, an LEE includes or consists essentially of multiple devices, for example an LED and a Zener diode for static-electricity protection. In some embodiments, an LEE may include or consist essentially of a packaged LED, i.e., a bare LED die encased or partially encased in a package. In some embodiments, the packaged LED may also include a light-conversion material. In some embodiments, the light from the LEE may include or consist essentially of light emitted only by the light-conversion material, while in other embodiments the light from the LEE may include or consist essentially of a combination of light emitted from an LED and from the light-conversion material. In some embodiments, the light from the LEE may include or consist essentially of light emitted only by an LED.
One or more non-LEE devices such as Zener diodes, transient voltage suppressors (TVSs), varistors, etc., may be placed on each lightsheet to protect the LEEs 130 from damage that may be caused by high-voltage events, such as electrostatic discharge (ESD) or lightning strikes. In one embodiment, conductive trace segments shown in
In one embodiment, an LEE 130 includes or consists essentially of a bare semiconductor die 2600, a schematic example of which is shown in
As used herein, wavelength-conversion material or phosphor refers to any material that shifts the wavelengths of light irradiating it and/or that is fluorescent and/or phosphorescent, is utilized interchangeably with the terms “light-conversion material” or “phosphor,” and may refer to only a powder or particles or to the powder or particles with a binder. In some embodiments, the phosphor includes or consists essentially of a mixture of one or more wavelength-conversion materials and a matrix material. The wavelength-conversion material is incorporated to shift one or more wavelengths of at least a portion of the light emitted by the light emitter to other desired wavelengths (which are then emitted from the larger device alone or color-mixed with another portion of the original light emitted by the die). A wavelength-conversion material may include or consist essentially of phosphor powders, quantum dots or the like within a transparent matrix. Phosphors are typically available in the form of powders or particles, and in such case may be mixed in binders, e.g., silicone. Phosphors vary in composition, and may include lutetium aluminum garnet (LuAG or GAL), yttrium aluminum garnet (YAG) or other phosphors known in the art. GAL, LuAG, YAG and other materials may be doped with various materials including for example Ce, Eu, etc. The phosphor may be a plurality of individual phosphors. The specific components and/or formulation of the phosphor and/or matrix material are not limitations of the present invention.
The binder may also be referred to as an encapsulant or a matrix material. In one embodiment the binder includes or consists essentially of a transparent material, for example a silicone-based material or epoxy, having an index of refraction greater than 1.35. In one embodiment, the phosphor includes other materials, for example SiO2, Al2O3, fumed silica or fumed alumina, to achieve other properties, for example to scatter light, to change the viscosity or to reduce settling of the powder in the binder. An example of the binder material includes materials from the ASP series of silicone phenyls manufactured by Shin Etsu, or the Sylgard series manufactured by Dow Corning.
In some embodiments, substantially all or a portion of substrate 2610 is removed prior to or after the bonding of LEE 130 described below. Such removal may be performed by, e.g., chemical etching, laser lift-off, mechanical grinding and/or chemical-mechanical polishing or the like. In some embodiments all or a portion of substrate 2610 is removed and a second substrate—e.g., one that is transparent to or reflective of a wavelength of light emitted by LEE 130—is attached to the substrate or semiconductor layer 2620 prior to or after the bonding of LEE 130 as described below. In some embodiments substrate 2610 includes or consists essentially of silicon and all or a portion of the silicon substrate may be removed prior to or after the bonding of LEE 130 described below. Such removal may be performed by, e.g., chemical etching, laser lift off, mechanical grinding and/or chemical-mechanical polishing or the like.
Electrical contact to LEE 130 may be achieved through contacts 2670 and 2680, which may make contact to the p- and n-layers 2650, 2630 respectively. LEE 130 may optionally feature a mirror or reflective surface 2660 formed over all or portions of layer 2650 and optionally other portions of LEE 130. Mirror 2660 may act to direct light emitted from light-emitting layer 2640 back towards and out of the substrate 2610, particularly in a flip-chip configuration where LEE 130 is mounted contact side down.
In some embodiments, LEE 130 has a square shape, while in other embodiments LEE 130 has a rectangular shape. In some preferred embodiments, to facilitate bonding (as described below) LEE 130 has a shape with a dimension in one direction that exceeds a dimension in an orthogonal direction (e.g., a rectangular shape), and has an aspect ratio of the orthogonal directions (length to width, in the case of a rectangular shape) of LEE 130 greater than about 1.2:1. In some embodiments, LEE 130 has an aspect ratio greater than about 2:1 or greater than 3:1. The shape and aspect ratio are not critical to the present invention, however, and LEE 130 may have any desired shape.
In some embodiments, LEE 130 has one lateral dimension less than 500 μm. Exemplary sizes of semiconductor die 2610 may include about 250 μm by about 600 μm, about 250 μm by about 400 μm, about 250 μm by about 300 μm, or about 225 μm by about 175 μm. In some embodiments, LEE 130 includes or consists essentially of a small LED die, also referred to as a “microLED.” A microLED generally has one lateral dimension less than about 300 μm. In some embodiments, semiconductor die 2610 has one lateral dimension less than about 200 μm or even less than about 100 μm. For example, a microLED may have a size of about 225 μm by about 175 μm or about 150 μm by about 100 μm or about 150 μm by about 50 μm. In some embodiments, the surface area of the top surface of a microLED is less than 50,000 μm2 or less than 10,000 μm2. However, the size of LEE 130 is not a limitation of the present invention and in other embodiments LEE 130 may have any size. For example, in some embodiments LEE 130 may have one lateral dimension of about 1 mm or about 2 mm. In some embodiments, LEE may include or consist essentially of a relatively large high-power packaged LEE, for example a relatively large high-power LED, for example with an input power of about 1 W, about 3 W, or 10 W or larger.
In some embodiments, LEE 130 may include or consist essentially of a “white die” that includes an LED that is integrated with a light-conversion material (e.g., a phosphor) before being attached to the lightsheet. An exemplary schematic of a white die 2700 is shown in
In some embodiments, white die 2700 is formed by forming the light-conversion material 2710 over and/or around multiple dies 2720 and then separating this structure into individual white dies as shown in
Light-conversion material 2710 may include or consist essentially of a transparent binder material alone, or phosphor powders, quantum dots or the like within a transparent binder matrix. Phosphors vary in composition, and in some embodiments may include lutetium aluminum garnet (LuAG or GAL), yttrium aluminum garnet (YAG) or other phosphors known in the art. GAL, LuAG, YAG and other materials may be doped with various materials including for example Ce, Eu, silicates doped with various materials including Ce, Eu, etc., aluminates, nitrides, and the like. The specific components and/or formulation of the phosphor and/or matrix material are not limitations of the present invention.
Light-conversion material 2710 may include a combination of individual phosphors. In one embodiment, the transparent matrix or binder includes silicone, epoxy, or other suitable materials. An example of a matrix material includes materials from the ASP series of silicone phenyls manufactured by Shin Etsu, or the Sylgard series manufactured by Dow Corning. The specific components and/or formulation of the phosphor and/or matrix material are not limitations of the present invention.
It should be noted that LEEs 130 may have other features than those shown in
In another embodiment, an LEE 130 includes or consists essentially of a packaged semiconductor die, for example a packaged laser diode or LED.
In some embodiments, LEEs 130 may emit light in a relatively small wavelength range, for example having a full width at half maximum in the range of about 20 nm to about 200 nm. In some embodiments, all LEEs 130 may emit light of the same or substantially the same wavelength, while in other embodiments different LEEs 130 may emit light of different wavelengths. In some embodiments LEEs 130 may emit white light, for example that is perceived as white light by the eye. In some embodiments, the white light may be visible light with a spectral power distribution the chromaticity of which is close to the blackbody locus in the CIE 1931 xy or similar color space. In some embodiments, white light has a color temperature in the range of about 2000 K to about 10,000 K. The emission wavelength, full width at half maximum (FWHM) of the emitted light or radiation or other optical characteristics of LEEs 130 may not be all the same and are not a limitation of the present invention.
Substrate 165 may include or consist essentially of a semicrystalline or amorphous material, e.g., polyethylene naphthalate (PEN), polyethylene terephthalate (PET), polycarbonate, polyethersulfone, polyester, polyimide, polyethylene, fiberglass, FR4, metal core printed circuit board, (MCPCB), and/or paper. Substrate 165 may include multiple layers, e.g., a deformable layer over a rigid layer, for example, a semicrystalline or amorphous material, e.g., PEN, PET, polycarbonate, polyethersulfone, polyester, polyimide, polyethylene, and/or paper formed over a rigid substrate for example comprising, acrylic, aluminum, steel and the like. Depending upon the desired application for which embodiments of the invention are utilized, substrate 165 may be substantially optically transparent, translucent, or opaque. For example, substrate 165 may exhibit a transmittance or a reflectivity greater than 70% for optical wavelengths ranging between approximately 400 nm and approximately 700 nm. In some embodiments substrate 165 may exhibit a transmittance or a reflectivity of greater than 70% for one or more wavelengths emitted by LED 130. Substrate 165 may also be substantially insulating, and may have an electrical resistivity greater than approximately 100 ohm-cm, greater than approximately 1×106 ohm-cm, or even greater than approximately 1×1010 ohm-cm.
Conductive elements, i.e., power conductors 110, 120, back power conductors 910, 920 and conductive traces 160, may be formed via conventional deposition, photolithography, and etching processes, plating processes, lamination, lamination and patterning, evaporation sputtering or the like or may be formed using a variety of different printing processes. For example, power conductors 110, 120, back power conductors 910, 920 and conductive traces 160 may be formed via screen printing, flexographic printing, ink-jet printing, and/or gravure printing. Power conductors 110, 120, back power conductors 910, 920 and conductive traces 160 may include or consist essentially of a conductive material (e.g., an ink or a metal, metal film or other conductive materials or the like), which may include one or more elements such as silver, gold, aluminum, chromium, copper, and/or carbon. Power conductors 110, 120, back power conductors 910, 920 and conductive traces 160 may have a thickness in the range of about 50 nm to about 1000 μm. In some embodiments the thickness of power conductors 110, 120, back power conductors 910, 920 and conductive traces 160 may be determined by the current to be carried thereby. While the thickness of one or more of power conductors 110, 120, back power conductors 910, 920 and conductive traces 160 may vary, the thickness is generally substantially uniform along the length of the trace to simplify processing. However, this is not a limitation of the present invention and in other embodiments the thickness and/or material of power conductors 110, 120, back power conductors 910, 920 and conductive traces 160 may vary. In some embodiments, all or a portion of power conductors 110, 120, back power conductors 910, 920 and conductive traces 160 may be covered or encapsulated. In some embodiments, a layer of material, for example insulating material, may be formed over all or a portion of power conductors 110, 120, back power conductors 910, 920 and conductive traces 160. Such a material may include, e.g., a sheet of material such as used for substrate 165, a printed layer, for example using screen, ink jet, stencil or other printing means, a laminated layer, or the like. Such a printed layer may include, for example, an ink, a plastic and oxide, or the like. The covering material and/or the method by which it is applied is not a limitation of the present invention.
In one embodiment, the conductive traces 160 are formed with a gap between adjacent conductive traces 160, and LEEs 130 and CEs 140 are electrically coupled to conductive traces 160 using conductive adhesive, e.g., an isotropically conductive adhesive and/or an ACA.
Turning now to CE 140, in one embodiment of this invention the position of CE 140 fits within the pitch structure of the LEEs 130. In other words, the placement of CE 140 generally does not change the pitch of the LEEs 130. For example, in
As discussed above, CE 140 may be one component or multiple active and/or passive components. In one embodiment, power conductors 110, 120 provide a DC voltage or substantially DC voltage and CE 140 includes or consists essentially of a resistor 3010, e.g., a current-limiting resistor, as shown in
As discussed above, in embodiments where CE 140 includes or consists essentially of a resistor, there may be trade-offs between efficiency and current stability. While such trade-offs may be acceptable in certain products, other products may require relatively better current stability at higher efficiencies, and in these cases CE 140 may include or consist essentially of multiple components or a circuit element, as discussed above.
In one embodiment, CE 140 includes or consists essentially of a FET 3020 and a resistor 3010, as shown in
In one embodiment, the CE 140 includes or consists essentially of two NPN BJTs 3030, 3031 and two resistors 3010, 3011 (as shown in
In one example, FET 3020 is a MMBFJ113 manufactured by Fairchild Semiconductor and resistor 3010 has a value of about 250 ohms to achieve a constant current of approximately 5 mA. In one example BJTs 3030, 3031 are MMBT2484 manufactured by Fairchild Semiconductor and resistors 3010, 3011 have a value of approximately 39 kiloohms and 113 ohms, respectively, to achieve a constant current of approximately 5 mA.
In general, the efficiency and current stability increase with the number of components, as does the cost. In some embodiments where CE 140 includes or consists essentially of multiple components, the components may be in discrete form (i.e., each component individually electrically coupled to conductive traces 160) or in hybrid form (where multiple separate components are mounted on a submount, which is then electrically coupled to conductive traces 160), or in monolithic form (where multiple components are integrated on a semiconductor chip, for example a silicon-based or other semiconductor-based integrated circuit). In some embodiments, CE 140 may be in bare-die form, while in other embodiments CE 140 may be packaged or potted or the like. In some embodiments, CE 140 may include or consist essentially of a bare-die integrated circuit, for example including or consisting essentially of resistor 3010 and FET 3020 of
In other embodiments, power conductors 110, 120 may provide AC power, or power modulated at different frequencies and in these embodiments CEs 140 may be selected accordingly or may be omitted. In one embodiment, power conductors 110, 120 may provide a standard line voltage, for example about 120 VAC or about 240 VAC or about 277 VAC, for example at about 50 Hz or about 60 Hz. In some embodiments, CE 140 may accommodate a plurality of input types, a so-called “universal” CE 140, while in other embodiments different CEs 140 may be required for different input types. The actual component or components of CEs 140 are not limiting to this invention; however, in preferred embodiments of this invention, the positioning of CEs 140 does not disrupt the LEE pitch. In another embodiment of this invention, the positioning of CEs 140 is independent of LEE pitch.
As discussed above, CEs 140 and LEEs 130 may be electrically coupled to conductive traces 160 using a conductive adhesive.
While the discussion above has focused on manufacture of embodiments of the present invention in flexible sheet form, this is not a limitation of the present invention, and in other embodiments the inventive concepts may be applied to other systems. For example, some examples above utilize a flexible substrate 165 to permit fabrication of a flexible lightsheet and/or to permit roll-to-roll processing or manufacture; however, this is not a limitation of the present invention and in other embodiments substrate 165 may include or consist essentially of other materials or types of wiring boards, for example conventional printed circuit boards (PCBs), FR4, metal core PCBs, or the like. For example, some examples above utilize a conductive adhesive or an ACA to attach LEE 130 to conductive elements 160; however, this is not a limitation of the present invention and in other embodiments other attachment methods, for example ones that may provide higher thermal conductivity or higher temperature operation, or the like, may be used. Thus, one or all of the inventive concepts of the present invention, including but not limited to (i) powering multiple strings 150 from one set of power conductors with a constant voltage; (ii) each string including CE 140 to control the current in LEEs 130 of that string; (iii) disposition of CE 140 within LEE 130 pitch; (iv) ability to cut to length; and (v) ability to tile across the joint with substantially no change in pitch across the joint, are applicable to any type of system. For example,
In general in the above discussion the arrays of semiconductor dies, light emitting elements, optics, and the like have been shown as square or rectangular arrays; however this is not a limitation of the present invention and in other embodiments these elements may be formed in other types of arrays, for example hexagonal, triangular or any arbitrary array. In some embodiments these elements may be grouped into different types of arrays on a single substrate.
The terms and expressions employed herein are used as terms and expressions of description and not of limitation, and there is no intention, in the use of such terms and expressions, of excluding any equivalents of the features shown and described or portions thereof. In addition, having described certain embodiments of the invention, it will be apparent to those of ordinary skill in the art that other embodiments incorporating the concepts disclosed herein may be used without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. Accordingly, the described embodiments are to be considered in all respects as only illustrative and not restrictive.
Claims
1. A lighting system comprising:
- a lightsheet comprising: a substrate; disposed on the substrate, (i) first and second spaced-apart power conductors and (ii) a plurality of conductive traces; a plurality of light-emitting strings, each light-emitting string (i) comprising a plurality of interconnected light-emitting elements spaced along the light-emitting string, (ii) having a first end electrically coupled to the first power conductor, and (iii) having a second end electrically coupled to the second power conductor, wherein the power conductors supply power to the light-emitting strings; and one or more control elements each configured to control current to one or more of the light-emitting strings,
- wherein, for each light-emitting string, a pitch at which the light-emitting elements are spaced is (i) substantially constant and (ii) independent of a position of the control element electrically connected to the light-emitting string.
2. The lighting system of claim 1, wherein the lightsheet is separable, via a cut spanning the first and second power conductors and not crossing a light-emitting string, into two partial lightsheets each comprising (i) one or more light-emitting strings, and (ii) portions of the first and second power conductors configured to supply power to and thereby illuminate the one or more light-emitting strings of the partial lightsheet.
3. The lighting system of claim 1, wherein the lightsheet is flexible.
4. The lighting system of claim 1, further comprising, electrically connected to the power conductors, a power supply configured to provide power to the power conductors.
5. The lighting system of claim 4, further comprising a second lightsheet (i) coupled to the lightsheet and (ii) comprising third and fourth spaced-apart power conductors disposed thereon, wherein the power supply is configured to supply power to the third and fourth power conductors.
6. The lighting system of claim 4, wherein the power supply is configured to provide a substantially constant voltage to the power conductors.
7. The lighting system of claim 4, wherein the power supply is configured to adjust a light output of at least one light-emitting string by modulating a voltage or a current of the power supply.
8. The lighting system of claim 7, wherein modulating the voltage or the current of the power supply comprises pulse-width modulating the voltage or the current of the power supply.
9. The lighting system of claim 1, wherein (i) a thickness of the conductive traces is less than 1000 μm, and (ii) the lightsheet comprises polyethylene terephthalate.
10. The lighting system of claim 1, wherein the one or more control elements comprises a plurality of control elements each electrically connected to a different light-emitting string.
11. The lighting system of claim 1, wherein each light-emitting string comprises only 12, 16, 18, 20, 60, 72, 84, 90, 96, 108, 120, 126, 140, 150, 156, 160, 168, 180, 198, 200, 204, 210, or 216 light-emitting elements.
12. The lighting system of claim 1, wherein light-emitting elements of each light-emitting string are connected in series.
13. The lighting system of claim 1, wherein at least one control element is configured to provide a substantially constant current to at least one light-emitting string.
14. The lighting system of claim 1, wherein at least one light-emitting element emits substantially white light.
15. The lighting system of claim 1, wherein at least one light-emitting string is a folded string having a straight-line length longer than a dimension of the lightsheet spanned by the power conductors.
16. The lighting system of claim 1, wherein, in at least one light-emitting string, each light-emitting element is coupled to conductive traces on the substrate via at least one of (i) a conductive adhesive, (ii) an anisotropic conductive adhesive, (iii) a wire bond, or (iv) solder.
17. The lighting system of claim 1, further comprising an insulating layer disposed over (i) at least portions of some of the conductive traces, (ii) at least a portion of at least one of the first or second power conductors, (iii) at least a portion of the substrate, and/or (iv) at least portions of some of the light-emitting elements.
18. The lighting system of claim 1, further comprising a second control element (i) electrically connected to at least one light-emitting string, and (ii) configured to control the at least one light-emitting string to produce an optical characteristic of light emitted thereby.
19. The lighting system of claim 1, further comprising a second control element configured to supply power to the power conductors.
20. The lighting system of claim 19, wherein the plurality of light-emitting strings comprises at least two groups of light-emitting strings, each group of light emitting-strings having a different optical characteristic controlled by the second control element.
21. The lighting system of claim 20, wherein the optical characteristic comprises at least one of light intensity, output power, color temperature, color rendering index, or light distribution pattern.
22. The lighting system of claim 20, wherein each of the at least two groups of light-emitting strings is separately energizable by the second control element.
23. The lighting system of claim 19, wherein the second control element is configured to communicate information to a control system.
24. The lighting system of claim 1, further comprising an array of optical elements each associated with at least one light-emitting element, the array of optical elements at least one of focusing or shaping light from the light-emitting elements to a desired illumination pattern.
25. The lighting system of claim 1, wherein at least one control element is (i) electrically connected to at least one light-emitting string, and (ii) configured to control an optical characteristic of the light-emitting elements of the at least one light-emitting string to which it is electrically connected.
26. The lighting system of claim 25, wherein the optical characteristic comprises at least one of light intensity, output power, color temperature, color rendering index, spectral power distribution, or light distribution pattern.
27. The lighting system of claim 1, wherein at least one power conductor is configured to provide a control signal to at least one control element.
28. The lighting system of claim 1, wherein, in at least one light-emitting string, each light-emitting element is coupled to at least two conductive traces on the substrate via an anisotropic conductive adhesive activatable via application of at least one of pressure, heat, or a magnetic field.
29. The lighting system of claim 1, wherein the plurality of light-emitting strings comprises at least two groups of light-emitting strings, each group of light emitting-strings having a different optical characteristic controlled by at least one of the one or more control elements.
30. The lighting system of claim 1, wherein at least one of the one or more control elements is configured to communicate, to a control system, at least one of lighting system temperature, light output value, lighting system operation time, lighting system lumen degradation, or lighting system color temperature.
5597070 | January 28, 1997 | Wu |
6591530 | July 15, 2003 | Liao |
7109528 | September 19, 2006 | Nakata |
7460743 | December 2, 2008 | Lee |
7777166 | August 17, 2010 | Roberts |
1005837 | March 2011 | Lerman et al. |
7934856 | May 3, 2011 | Sanpei et al. |
8123375 | February 28, 2012 | Negley et al. |
8198109 | June 12, 2012 | Lerman et al. |
8294075 | October 23, 2012 | Roberts |
8461613 | June 11, 2013 | Chou et al. |
8491157 | July 23, 2013 | Oba et al. |
8704448 | April 22, 2014 | Tischler et al. |
8786200 | July 22, 2014 | Tischler et al. |
8884534 | November 11, 2014 | Tischler et al. |
20050265029 | December 1, 2005 | Epstein et al. |
20070290217 | December 20, 2007 | Daniels |
20080101070 | May 1, 2008 | Chou |
20080107373 | May 8, 2008 | Lee |
20080191220 | August 14, 2008 | Daniels et al. |
20090261743 | October 22, 2009 | Chen et al. |
20090272987 | November 5, 2009 | Wang |
20100031996 | February 11, 2010 | Basol |
20100147364 | June 17, 2010 | Gonzalez et al. |
20110037409 | February 17, 2011 | Van De Ven et al. |
20110163682 | July 7, 2011 | Jungwirth |
20120057239 | March 8, 2012 | Shiojiri et al. |
20120060895 | March 15, 2012 | Rubin et al. |
20120146066 | June 14, 2012 | Tischler et al. |
20130140430 | June 6, 2013 | Roberts |
20130181619 | July 18, 2013 | Tischler et al. |
20130256710 | October 3, 2013 | Andrews et al. |
20140062315 | March 6, 2014 | Tischler et al. |
20140062316 | March 6, 2014 | Tischler et al. |
20140062318 | March 6, 2014 | Tischler et al. |
20140097454 | April 10, 2014 | Hussell |
20140175993 | June 26, 2014 | Tischler et al. |
- International Search Report and Written Opinion mailed Dec. 23, 2013 for International Application No. PCT/US2013/056567 (12 pages).
Type: Grant
Filed: Dec 23, 2014
Date of Patent: Sep 8, 2015
Patent Publication Number: 20150108906
Assignee: Cooledge Lighting Inc. (Richmond)
Inventors: Michael A. Tischler (Vancouver), Paul Jungwirth (Burnaby)
Primary Examiner: Thuy Vinh Tran
Application Number: 14/580,777
International Classification: H05B 37/00 (20060101); H05B 33/08 (20060101);